Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Ipad + Artrage experiments

My boyfriend got an Ipad a while ago, which has became an abused object at home.

When I heard that there're apps allowing you to paint on it, with fingers, or a capacitive stylus and even a capacitive brush, I couldn't resist to try them. What sounded more appealing is the possibility to sketch in a traditional way, without the need to go around with a lot of material.

I got a Sensu brush (includes brush and stylus at both ends), downloaded Artrage for Ipad, and start to doodle to try the stylus and program features. I felt like when I tried PS and the Wacom tablet the first time: fully handicapped.

Issues:

The first issue is the complete lack of pressure sensitivity. I use pressure massively, when drawing/painting both traditional and digital, and suffer when I cannot use it.

The second problem is the low resolution of the drawing, which do not allow you to draw tiny details, especially when using watercolour/oil brushes. The pencil/pen can compensate for it, but you get another effect. When you would like to paint tiny strokes, what you get are perfect, small circles. So, the sketch below named 'Autumn leaves' suffers of this flaw, and I find it awful, frankly.

The sizes for some brushes are limited.

Artrage has some bugs: sometimes the program stops before you can save; big, square areas of your drawing can get damaged and lost when you, for instance, try to erase/smudge/ or other actions.

The stylus/brush

having a stylus is much better than finger, the precision is really greater. I didn't experience an advantage of capacitive brush compared to the stylus. I believed that the brush strokes size could depend on the brush fibres and how you 'paint', but this is not true. The only way to set the stroke's size, is through the program.

You must also be careful not to put your fingers on screen, too, while drawing: otherwise you'll get effects you don't want, and maybe just realize it after a while.

Great features

Artrage works in another way than Photoshop. I think is moreless like Painter, though I've a very limited experience with the latter. It looks really like a real traditional painting, with watercolour, oil, pencil, pen effects. They also blend each other like in a traditional drawing.

You can paint on separate layers, and import reference pictures (maybe taken with Ipad).

Drawing with stylus don't have the annoying delay effect that I experienced by sketching with PS.

It is a wonderful way to keep sketch and paint while travelling, (or maybe lying in bed with a baby who wakes up every half hour): all those situations when dealing with brushes, solvents, or a whole computer with a Wacom, is very impractical or impossible.

The knife brush (which is much about smudging and blurring) has some very interesting effects.

I feel anyway that I need tons of practice to
learn to use each brush, to get the desired effect, and how it
blends with other brushes, and so on.

Characters

Autumn leaves

Ophelia

This is an attempt for realistic painting, used a blurry ipad photo as reference. I'm not very satisfied, looks like a bad PS airbrush painting.

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This Blog

I used to paint in a traditional way, as a hobby. After I met my boyfriend, I tried his Wacom tablet. This place collects my work-in-progress, from level zero to...we'll see.

All the images, if not otherwise specified, are done by me and are licensed under a Creative Common attribution: please do not use or copy them without my permission.

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About Me

Officially, a Chemist. When I was 14 I had to choose between Science and Art: I chose the first, but practising the second in my free time.I'm not a professional so I can paint only when my real job and my child do let me. But, I love do it!